2. Summary
The typical cost of full-time holiday childcare in Britain
in 2010 is £92.99, which varies between £79.02 per
week in the West Midlands and £105.74 per week in
the South East. There is discernible variation in the
cost of holiday childcare both between regions and
between local authorities within regions.
In some areas local authority-run provision is
cheaper than private, voluntary and independent
(PVI) provision but in others it is more expensive. In
some areas costs have risen since 2009; in others
they have fallen. In short, the picture is complex and
highly volatile.
The sufficiency of holiday childcare in England (by
which we mean the amount of childcare available,
compared with the amount that parents need) fell
slightly in the past year but increased in Wales.
Currently, 20 per cent of English Family Information
Services (FIS) can definitively state that they have
enough holiday childcare to meet parental needs as
opposed to 13 per cent of Welsh FIS.
Both England and Wales suffer from a severe paucity
of suitable holiday childcare for children aged 12
and over, whilst England also has a particular lack of
holiday childcare for disabled children.
Methodology
In June 2010 Daycare Trust asked all Family
Information Services (FIS) in England and Wales and
all Childcare Information Services (ChIS) in Scotland
to complete a short questionnaire concerning the
availability and typical cost of full-time1
holiday
childcare in their area. The survey also collated data
on parental demand for wraparound childcare (ie
childcare either side of available holiday playscheme
hours) and whether or not parents had reported a
lack of holiday childcare.
For the second year running, a distinction was
made between maintained sector (ie local authority)
and PVI-run provision, with an overall mean cost
being calculated for each region. By making these
distinctions we have been able to further explore the
patchwork of holiday childcare costs across Britain.
We received 132 responses in total, an overall
response rate of 66 per cent. All regions enjoyed
a response rate of 63 per cent or greater, with the
exception of the East of England.
1
FIS were asked to provide details of how many hours their full-time
provision operated for. The average number of hours per day was 9.14
across all regions and across local authority and PVI provision.
02
This is the ninth annual holiday
childcare costs survey conducted by
Daycare Trust.
Holiday childcare costs survey 2010
3. The cost of holiday childcare
Figure 1: Typical weekly cost by region and percentage change 2009-10
2
The average for Great Britain is the mean of the 10 English regions,
Scotland and Wales.
Figure 2: Percentage change in the mean cost of holiday childcare 2009-2010
2
Figure 1: Typical weekly cost by region and percentage change 2009-10
2
The average for Great Britain is the mean of the 10 English regions, Scotland and Wales.
Region
Typical
Weekly Cost
(LA) 2010
LA
percentage
Change
Typical
Weekly Cost
(PVI) 2010
PVI
percentage
Change
Typical
Weekly Cost
(Mean)
Mean
percentage
Change
East of England £83.00 ‐6.48% £119.32 9.72% £101.16 2.44%
East Midlands £75.17 ‐6.04% £88.73 ‐9.17% £81.95 ‐7.76%
Greater London £74.00 ‐13.09% £102.00 ‐8.03% £88.00 ‐11.05%
North East £63.05 ‐11.21% £108.10 26.34% £85.58 9.33%
North West £84.29 9.71% £106.31 16.86% £95.30 13.59%
South East £98.36 12.32% £113.11 16.50% £105.74 14.52%
South West £95.83 6.29% £113.03 9.75% £104.43 8.14%
West Midlands £65.30 ‐12.67% £92.74 3.30% £79.02 ‐3.96%
Yorkshire & Humber £104.25 12.45% £98.04 1.70% £101.15 6.97%
England (Regional Av.) £82.60 ‐0.46% £104.55 5.89% £93.58 2.99%
Wales £58.89 ‐6.61% £101.60 ‐0.64% £80.25 ‐2.91%
Scotland £104.28 10.50% £96.47 0.01% £100.38 5.19%
Great Britain2
£82.40 0.58% £103.55 4.51% £92.99 3.00%
03
4. England
The typical cost of a week’s full-time holiday
childcare in England this summer is £93.58, three per
cent higher than in 2009. Although this represents
just a small increase in costs at a national level, the
picture at a regional level is much more fragmented,
with significant fluctuations across local authorities
in England. The most acute price variations were
observed in the South East, where costs grew by
14.5 per cent, and Greater London, where costs fell
by 11 per cent.
The disparate nature of holiday childcare costs
in England becomes even more apparent when
accountingforthedifferencebetweenlocalauthority-
and PVI-provided childcare, where costs fell by
0.5 per cent and rose by six per cent respectively.
Consequently, the typical cost of PVI provided holiday
childcare now stands at £104.55, compared to just
£82.60 for that provided by local authorities. The
comparatively low cost of maintained provision may
be explained by the fact that many local authorities
offer significantly subsidised holiday childcare.
Within local authority provided holiday childcare,
typical costs range from £63.05 per week in the
North East to £104.25 per week in Yorks and Humber,
where costs fell by 11 per cent and rose by 12 per
cent respectively.
The East Midlands has the cheapest PVI-provided
holiday childcare at £88.73 per week. The highest
costs for PVI-provided holiday childcare are found in
the East of England and South East, at £119.32 and
£113.11 per week, respectively.
Wales
At £80.25 per week, the typical cost of holiday
childcare in Wales is significantly lower than England
and Scotland. This is primarily accounted for by the
low cost of local authority-run holiday childcare in
Wales, which fell by 6.6 per cent to £58.89 per week.
The cost of PVI provided holiday childcare in Wales
has stabilised in the past twelve months, falling by
just 0.6 per cent. However, at an average cost of
£101.60 per week, it is still significantly higher than
maintained provision.
Scotland
On average, the cost of holiday childcare in Scotland
increased by 5.5 per cent to £100.38 per week – the
most expensive of the constituent nations. Unlike
Wales and England, this cost fluctuation has been
driven by the rising cost of local authority-run
provision.
Consequently, local authority maintained provision
in Scotland is significantly more expensive than
England and Wales - £21.68 and £45.39 more per
week, respectively. This disparity, also observed in
2009, has become more acute in the past twelve
months, with the cost of local authority-run care
increasing by 10.5 per cent in Scotland whilst
decreasing in both England and Wales.
Conversely, the cost of PVI-run holiday childcare in
Scotland is lower than England and Wales, at £96.47
per week, having risen by just 0.01 per cent in the
past twelve months.
04 Holiday childcare costs survey 2010
5. 05
Amount and sufficiency of holiday
childcare
There have been relatively few areas in which the
amount of holiday childcare has increased, with
most areas seeing a decrease or no change in
provision. The 2010 survey sees many more FIS
reporting decreases in provision – 39 per cent of FIS
in England, 43 per cent in Wales and 47 per cent in
Scotland – compared to corresponding figures from
the 2009 survey of 26 per cent, 37 per cent and 20
per cent respectively.
This may be occurring as a result of decreased
funding for holiday provision, with local authorities
making cuts to provision in the current financial
year in anticipation of forthcoming budget cuts,
expected to be in the region of 15 per cent. For
example, Westminster Council has outlined £1.6
million in cuts to early years funding and £900,000
to youth and play services.3
There may also be
reduced demand because of the recession and
parents trying to reduce spending or being out of
work - some local authorities reported through the
survey that limited demand from parents had led
to playschemes not going ahead this summer. In
any case this is a worrying trend, especially with
the forthcoming welfare reform changes which will
require all single parents with school-aged children
to look for work.
In England the number of FIS being able to
definitively say there is sufficient holiday childcare
for all children has decreased substantially since
2009, from 28 per cent to 20 per cent. In Wales,
the sufficiency picture is improving, although the
numbers of FIS reporting sufficient childcare is still
much lower than in England, with only 8 per cent
of FIS reporting sufficient childcare for children
aged 12+ and only 13 per cent reporting sufficient
childcare for all children.
Figure 4: Sufficient childcare – England and Wales 2009-10
3
http://www.cypnow.co.uk/news/1012864/Westminster-outlines-
service-cuts/
[Designers - Please can the following two charts go next to eachother on the design
copy]
Figure 4: Sufficient childcare – England and Wales 2009-10
In England the number of FIS being able to definitively say there is sufficient holiday childc
for all children has decreased substantially since 2009, from 28 per cent to 20 per cent. In
Wales, the sufficiency picture is improving, although the numbers of FIS reporting sufficien
childcare is still much lower than in England, with only 8 per cent of FIS reporting sufficien
childcare for children aged 12+ and only 13 per cent reporting sufficient childcare for all
children.
Figure 5: Do parents report a need for wraparound childcare or an overall lack of ho
childcare?
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
All children 4‐7 year
olds
8‐11 year
olds
12+ Disabled
children
To cover
working
hours
England
2009
2010
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
All children 4‐7 year
olds
8‐11 year
olds
12+ Disabled
children
To cover
working
hours
Wales
2009
2010
[Designers - Please can the following two charts go next to eachother on the designed
copy]
Figure 4: Sufficient childcare – England and Wales 2009-10
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
All children 4‐7 year
olds
8‐11 year
olds
12+ Disabled
children
To cover
working
hours
England
2009
2010
10
15
20
25
30
35
Wales
2009
Since 2008, all local authorities in England and
Wales have been required to undertake Childcare
SufficiencyAssessments,withthenextassessments
due in April 2011, so local authorities now have a
much better understanding of the childcare picture
in their area.
Increased Same Decreased
England 22% 38% 39%
Wales 29% 36% 43%
Scotland 21% 32% 47%
Figure 3: Has the amount of holiday childcare
provision increased in your area since 2009?
6. 06
Do parents report a need for
wraparound childcare?
Much holiday provision runs for fewer hours than
parents need to cover their working hours – with
only half of FIS in England (the same as in 2009) and
a third of FIS in Wales saying that they have enough
holiday childcare provision to cover working hours.
This correlates with parents reporting a need for
wraparound childcare in addition to the available
holiday playschemes: around half of FIS in England
and Wales, and over a third in Scotland, noted that
parents report a need for wraparound childcare.
Some local authorities have excellent provision
available at little or no cost, for example one local
authority provides free sessional provision from
10am-12noon and 1pm-3pm. Despite this provision
being very valuable to local children and young
people, it is unlikely to meet the needs of working
parents, unless they have networks of informal care
in place to work around the formal provision.
Do parents report a lack of holiday
childcare?
The numbers of FIS saying that parents report a lack
of holiday childcare is worryingly high. The situation
in England is particularly worrying; with 63 per cent
of FIS noting that parents have reported a lack of
holiday childcare – a significant increase on last year’s
figure of 46 per cent. The England regional average
masks even higher percentages in some regions,
for example 71 per cent of FIS in the North East,
75 per cent in the West Midlands and 88 per cent
in the South East said that parents had reported a
lack of holiday childcare in their area. Corresponding
figures in Wales continue to be high, at 71 per cent
(compared with 75 per cent in 2009), whereas in
Scotland the figure is much lower at 29 per cent.
Figure 5: Do parents report a need for wraparound
childcare or an overall lack of holiday childcare?
Budget implications
Changes in the budget announced by new
Chancellor George Osborne on 22nd June4
will have
implications for the affordability of holiday childcare,
both directly and indirectly.
Families with young children are set to be hit hardest
by the budget announcements, with the withdrawal
of the Health in Pregnancy Grant, limiting of the Sure
Start Grant to a first child only, and scrapping of the
baby element of the child tax credit and toddler tax
credit. It has been suggested that this could mean
an annual loss of £1,600 for some new mums.5
Some of the biggest budgetary savings announced
by the Chancellor will hit all families in receipt of tax
credits: changes to the taper (from 39 per cent to 41
per cent) and changes to disregard/overpayments
are estimated to save the Treasury over £2 billion,6
but could have a substantial impact on some
families. The increased taper will mean that there
will be a much steeper withdrawal of tax credits for
all, including withdrawal of the childcare element.
From April 2012 new claims and changes of
circumstances will only be backdated by one month
rather than the current three months and the income
disregard will be reduced to £5,000 by April 2013:
these changes are particularly pertinent as holiday
childcare costs are very time-limited and parents
have little time to get holiday play schemes, and
payment for them, organised, meaning that these
costs fluctuate greatly and are more likely to need
backdating as well as being liable to overpayment.
In addition, the family element will be combined with
the child element of tax credits, which will mean
that tax credits will stop for households earning
around £26,000 for a one-child family by April 2012.
This is substantially less than the current £58,000
threshold.
4
HM Treasury (22 June 2010) Budget 2010 The Stationery Office:
London
5
http://www.thisismoney.co.uk/news/article.html?in_article_
id=506914&in_page_id=2
6
http://www.ifs.org.uk/budgets/budgetjune2010/brewer.pdf
Need wraparound
childcare?
Lack of holiday
childcare?
England 46% 63%
Wales 50% 71%
Scotland 38% 29%
Holiday childcare costs survey 2010
7. 07
There was also an announcement of a £150 increase
in the child element of tax credits, which will help
many families on low incomes, but this will not
eliminate the losses for all families. For example,
Gingerbread estimate that a single mum with two
children earning £9.71 an hour will be £254 a year
worse off as a result of budget changes.7
Furthermore, from October 2011 the Government
has announced that it will lower the age at which lone
parents are expected to return to work, changing
from when their youngest child is aged seven to
aged five. This means that the availability of out of
school clubs and holiday clubs for younger primary-
aged children will become even more important.
Information about holiday childcare
When undertaking our survey, as was the case last
year, some FIS in England were unable to respond
as they did not have the data available, even four
weeks before the start of the school holidays. So
as well as a postcode lottery of holiday provision,
there also appears to be a patchwork of information
provision. This may be because of limited funds
for FIS, or because holiday childcare providers are
not passing on information to FIS in good time. In
either case the capacity of FIS and availability of
information needs to be improved so that parents
can get the information they need and plan for the
summer holidays accordingly.
Help with holiday childcare costs
The holiday childcare costs survey reports the high
costs of childcare in Britain, although it is important
to highlight that there is often a difference between
the fees charged and the actual amount that parents
pay. Some families can claim help with up to 80
per cent of childcare costs through the tax credits
system, although only 28% of families using formal
childcare and in receipt of Working Tax Credit (WTC)
also take up the childcare element8
– partly due
to the complicated eligibility criteria. Claiming the
childcare element of WTC for holiday childcare is
even more problematic as payments are spread over
the year and the system is not flexible enough to
easily allow for short-term increases in costs. This will
become even more of an issue once the changes to
backdating and income disregards are implemented,
as discussed above. Employer-supported childcare,
often arranged through childcare vouchers worth
up to £903 a year for basic-rate tax payers, is also
available to assist with childcare costs. Parents can
‘bank’ their childcare vouchers over the year to pay
for holiday childcare if they wish, ie if they have
limited or no childcare costs throughout the rest of
the year.
In Next Steps for Early Learning and Childcare9
the
previous Government set out a future ambition that
local authorities will make available to any parent
who wants it, the ability to ‘stretch’ their entitlement
to 15 hours care for three and four year olds over
the whole year, accessing fewer hours per week over
more weeks of the year. This could support working
parents of three- and four-year-olds to spread the
cost of childcare over the whole year rather than
having additional costs during school holidays.
The forthcoming code of practice,10
expected to be in
place in September 2010, states that local authorities
should consider how this offer could be in place at
local level by September 2012.
For further information about how to get help with
childcare costs, accessing free early years education
and all other childcare enquiries, call Daycare Trust’s
information line on 0845 872 6251.
7
Gingerbread (June 2010) Budget calculations
8
Speight et al (2009) Childcare and Early Years Survey of Parents 2008
DCSF
9
HM Government (2009) Next Steps for Early Learning and Childcare
DCSF
10
DCSF (2010) Code of Practice for Local Authorities on Delivery of
Free Early Years Provision for 3 & 4 year olds, http://www.dcsf.gov.uk/
everychildmatters/resources-and-practice/IG00689/